Tuesday, April 24, 2007

House: We got junk

We can't wait until we can park in the garage.

Right now, piles of carpet, carpet pad, wood, and trash enjoy shelter from the elements in our garage while our cars stay in the driveway. That is, until tomorrow.

Matt scheduled an appointment with 1-800-GOT-JUNK for tomorrow. The customer service rep was really friendly, and scheduling the appointment was really easy.

Hopefully we'll have good things to report tomorrow. While the service comes with a cost, this is one of those jobs we'll gladly pawn off on someone else.

Wednesday, April 18, 2007

House: Wood-floor project planner

I wish we would've come across this a week ago.

Then again, I probably should've looked for it. In any event, here's a nice interactive tool from Minwax — the Project Planner.

It walks you through the products they recommend for a wood-floor project.

This would've helped a few days ago, because we accidentally applied polycrylic as the first coat of finish instead of polyurethane. Turns out, polycrylic is better for furniture and cabinetry, not wood that endures heavy use like floors.

No worries.

The next three coats will be the right stuff — water-based polyurethane. We applied the first coat last night.

With just two more coats to go, the floors already look nice!

Monday, April 16, 2007

House: Almost there

Once we move in and have more time, we'll walk everyone through the work we did. Unfortunately, the presentation will be scatterred chronologically.

We'll post pictures and everything, too. But for now, here's a recap of this past weekend's work.

Thursday
Matt's sister Alli dropped cousin Pete from Seattle off at the apartment around 6p. We ate pizza, then got to work about 7p. Task at hand: tear up the carpeting in the two bedrooms and prepare the floors for sanding. We’ve treated the nursery as our lab for pretty much everything we’ve done at the house thus far, so we started there. The green (at least 20 years old) carpeting came up without too much trouble.

The tack strips, well, they were as easy as tack strips can be. Sometimes they splintered, sometimes they came up easily and brought the nails with them. After pulling the tack strips, we moved on to the carpet pad.

Unfortunately, the brown carpet “pad” seemed to have become one with the wood floor. To get that up from the floor, Matt had to use a chisel. This proved quite tedious and somewhat nerve wracking because we didn’t want to damage the floor, but that brown crap had to come off for us to sand. While Matt scraped the floor, Pete pulled carpeting in the master bedroom. By about 11p, the nursery floor was as clean as we could get it.

Matt then joined Pete in the master bedroom, and we finished pulling up the carpeting and carpet pad. This carpet was significantly newer than the other, so it and its pad came up easily. We called it a day at midnight after pulling up the staples from the floor. This left only the tack strips to be pulled Friday morning before we could get sanding.

Friday
We rented a floor sander from Home Depot at about 9:30a. Before we could sand, however, we sealed up the heat ducts, taped the electrical outlets, and pinned up a drop cloth to cover the door. We fired up the sander and let it go to work. Matt went over each floor with three different sandpaper grits. This took all of Friday and most of Saturday. Not much to report here. Basically just had to control the 100-pound sander and try to be as even as possible. Pete swept the floors after each time Matt went over them.

Matt's mom arrived Friday afternoon and cleaned the kitchen. Within about 10 minutes of her getting to the house, she declared the carpeting in the eat-in kitchen and the family room smelled too much like a litter box, so it had to go.

Saturday
Matt spent most of the day sanding the floors. During one of my breaks, I walked into the kitchen and saw my pregnant wife and AARP-eligible mom pulling up carpeting. During the next break, the two were pulling apart a railing. All this in preparation for the carpet installation this Thursday.

By the afternoon, the floor sanding was complete. So, we packed up the sander, returned it to Home Depot, and rented an edge sander. The floor sander can get as close as an inch to the base molding, so then you need an edge sander to get the rest. This 40-pound, "little" monster was ferocious. It took everything I had to keep it from pulling me for a ride across the floor.

Again, Matt started in the nursery. It went okay. I made the mistake of trying to “touch up” some spots in the middle of the floor. Well, the first coat of stain revealed just how much deeper the edge sander cuts into the wood than the floor sander. Fortunately we stained the nursery floor before I finished with the edge sander, so I learned not to take the edge sander anywhere other than, duh, the edge. We finished up around 9p.

Sunday
More sanding and staining. Finished the sanding by about 1p and returned it to Home Depot. Mom and Shana continued their work on the eat-in kitchen and the family room. Alli and friends arrived about 3p. Two of her friends primed doors, and Alli and our other cousin from Seattle, Alexandra, painted the bathrooms. Alex is in town to visit Marquette.

Mom left about 3:30p.

The girls left around 5:15p. Shana finished painting the bathroom in the master bedroom, and I wiped the master bedroom floor with a tack cloth to get it ready for the stain. Shana left about 6:30p. I stained the floor in the master bedroom and left the house at 8p.

Busy, busy weekend. Tonight, I’ll head over and apply the first of three coats of Polyurethane to the floors. The nice thing about this job: I can listen to the radio and not have to fight a machine.

Hard to believe we move this Friday.

Saturday, March 24, 2007

House: Green Home Tax Breaks

A Forbes.com article, "Groundbreaking Green Home Tax Breaks" (March 3, 2007), lays out some of the tax benefits to making a house more energy efficient.

Here are some excerpts from the article by Matt Woolsey:
  • "If materials are Energy Star-certified and fall under the scope of the Energy Policy Act, you can recoup some costs." Visit this link to learn more about the tax breaks put forth by the Energy Policy Act. According to the site, the tax benefits will remain in effect through 2007.
  • The Environmental Protection Agency "estimates that efficient materials can reduce energy costs by 30 percent."
  • Request an energy efficiency inventory. We're definitely going to do this at the new house. A representative from your local utility company — in our case, WE Energies — will come to your house and, as the article states, "highlight your home's trouble spots where the most energy is being wasted."
    A quick visit to WE Energies' web site brings up this list of "101 money-saving tips".
    Also, the WE Energies Residential page links to the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Home Energy Audit site, which boasts being "the first web-based do-it-yourself energy audit tool." Cool! We'll check this out after we move in and before we request the audit from WE Energies. We added this link to our "For the house" list.
  • According to Woolsey, "Exterior windows and doors, including skylights, that meet Energy Star requirements have a 10 percent tax credit up to $200. This also goes for storm windowns and doors. Roofing and insulation or sealing that meet efficiency requirements earns a 10 percent credit up to $500."
  • And finally, "if you're looking for the most consistent long-term green solution, the answer lies at your local nursery — trees."

Wednesday, March 21, 2007

House: Green idea #1

So we figured it'd be fun if we shared some of the things we came up with to "go green."

We're trying to come up with ways to green-ify our life. So, for instance, to cut down on paper-towel use at work, Matt now brings a hand towel. Let's take a quick look at how much paper this saves:
  • 1 foot of paper toweling per bathroom trip
  • 5 bathroom trips per day
  • 25 bathroom trips per week
  • 50 work-weeks a year
  • All that adds up to about 1,750 feet of paper toweling saved just by bringing a hand towel to work.
So that's our first green idea. Be sure to post in the comments the creative ways you "go green" in your daily lives.